80 . , Good taste is why you buy it c. ßallo lztÌ1lfJ t$ '\ 'J" ESTA.&..'SHEO '827 o ppOINTME""J" e'" "0 l' 'Iott lATE OVUM VtCTOR'A { i( '" lATE IUffG E:OONARO VII ........ , 4/$ QUA FINEST BLENDED SCOTCH WHISKY WH SKI BLaNOED . BOTTLED BY .fØ Gøfon ø -g; Dn. d'cotbuI ROÞUeE 01=' SCOTLA,..Ø SOt.E Df5TRfBlITORS FOR THß V SA 11- BRANDS l..c 1'IEW YORK It Y '" : .J'j. '" 14 $t.. t .<-S, &.. .. .00"""" , 8J TWELVE ZA--OLD . , .v ... T.....' TO .. _tt QiJtt.. OM" I!.ING fOW. VII f'.,.) .'" r()ltIO' " Y A" ..., Ð . JC:Ø"AItO # FINE&T BLENDED SCOTCH WHISKY tOO 8COT.(;W Wff !UCIC8 .81. tHo'! b "'\') ttOfft..tCl .. """"'" nltne '" OI&TU..L.ERS (lIt. nf/ '.... ORSFORTHEUSA 1\, fl. " ', ' i V . .n '- ......... ":>;., -'Qo - , \ ...... .. @"21" Blended Scotch Whisky, bottled in Scotland. 86 proof. Imported by "21" Brands, Inc., N.Y.C. JUNE I , I 9 7 5 ,.. forgotten. I don't have that luxury. As Commandt:r-in-Chief, I alone am re- sponsible for the lives of four hundred and twenty-five or thirty thousand Americans in Vietnam." In RIchard Nixon's America, his role was to act and to take responsibility, theirs to criti- cize, to gloat, and to forget But in the first months of his second two years the President had not acted boldly. (Neither, to be sure, had his opposition. ) In some respects, these months had been like the first months of his first two years. Now, as then, most of the Important work was clan- destine, and what was written on the public record was wobbly and indeci- sive and a bit sparse. The President had erased the image of national division, but he had not replaced it with a new image. His standing in the polls was the lowest it had been so far, and one poll had shown Senator Muskie leadIng by forty-seven per cent to thirty-nine in a trial heat of the election. But while the domestic staff of the White House had been planning Daniel Ellsberg's ordeal and arranging things with I.T.T. and the daIry producers, Hen- ry Kissinger, in an operation that was no less secret than these, had made a trip to China. In early July, while pre- tending to be laid up with a stomach ailment in Pakistan, he had gone to meet with Chou En-lai in Peking. The President, having erased his blackboard after the 1 970 congressional elections, now began to write again. On July 15th, he went on national television and, in a statement that lasted only three minutes, informed the country that he planned to make a trip to China. The news was as much of a surprise to his American listeners as it must have been to the Chinese. The Chi- nese, of course, had been taught for decades that the j\mencan govern- ment was the incarnation of everything evil in the world. American leaders had been called gangsters, monsters, hyenas, mad dogs-no abuse had been too rough. Now the Chinese learned that the worst imperialist, the head gangster the President of the United States himself-was about to visit their shores. To the Americans the gesture was in some ways even more startling. f\merica had paid in blood for its sup- posed enmity with "Asian Commu- nism," whose headquarters was pre- sumahly in Peking. Just twenty months before, the President had spoken of na- tions whose dreams of "world con- quest" were still alive, and more re- cently than that he had warned the country of rampant worldwide to-